2. Objectives
1. Understand child online protection overview
2. Understand other Child Protection concerns in
Home-Based Learning (sexual and non-sexual)
3. Identify the different children’s protective behavior
online
3. Child Protection in Basic Education in the
Time of COVID-19
Setting the Child Online Protection Landscape
Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
4. Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
Violence at Home
For many of our learners, home
is a safe place.
However, there are those
wherein a home is
unfortunately, not their safe
place
5. What is Child Sexual Abuse?
Child Sexual Abuse - includes the employment,
persuasion, inducement, enticement or coercion of a
child to engage in, or assist another person to engage
in sexual intercourse or lascivious conduct, or
molestation, prostitution of or incest with children (RA
7610)
Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
6. What is Child Sexual Abuse?
occurs when a person
whether young or old
male or female
uses a child for
his or her own sexual
gratification
It can involve forcing, tricking
or threatening a child into
sexual activity.
7. What is Child Sexual Abuse? (simple definition)
occurs when a person
whether young or old
male or female
uses a child for
his or her own sexual
gratification
Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
nang aabuso, offender,
abuser
kahit sino base sa edad
malimit ang alam lang natin ay lalaki
ang tingin sa bata ay “mga gamit”,”an object”
upang mapunan ang sexual na pagnanasa, hindi lamang
intercourse
8. Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
The National Baseline Study on Violence Against
Children produced data showing that one-in-four
children (24.9%) reportedly suffered from any form of
sexual violence in any setting
9. Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
Physical contact
live streaming, pagkuha ng litrato ng
walang kasuotan, paninilip
10.
11. Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
Sino sa tingin ninyo na mga
“trusted adults” ay usual
perpetrators?
12. Disclaimer
Even boys can become victims of child sexual abuse
(in 2015 NBVACS study, Prevalence for males stood at
28.7% and with females at 21.1%)
Perpetrators are not limited to fathers. Any member
of the household or immediate community can be
potential perpetrator
13. Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
Who are more at risk?
14. Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
Who are more at risk?
All children with disabilities –
developmental disability, deaf and
with autism
15. Isulong! Karapatan ng Bata sa Edukasyon sa Panahon ng COVID-19
Who are more at risk?
Children in poverty
16. Who are more at
risk?
Children in an
emotionally unhealthy
environment
17. Learning Points
There are several behaviors that can be considered child
sexual abuse
Some of them are very explicit in nature, some are not
Regardless if these are touching and non - touching, they
are all considered violations to child rights to protection
Even if a behavior or a situation is non-touching in
nature, we must treat it seriously
18. Learning Points
Because in most cases, sexual violence at home is
perpetrated by a trusted adult (an immediate family member, a
relative or a close friend of the family such as neighbor),
children have a more difficult time to disclose of the abuse
Societal and family pressure further builds up barriers to
disclosure
Offenders also groom children not to disclose
The culture of silence further contributes to keeping abuse at
home a secret.
19. Rape cases went down by 24 percent to 3,446 cases
recorded during the six-month lockdown from 4,580
incidents reported in a similar period before the lockdown
21. Corporal punishment in the home
Caregivers experiencing stresses and lacking the
knowledge/skills to process said stresses plus lack of know-
how on positive discipline techniques
22. Building up Children’s Protective Behavior
Child Protection in Basic Education in
the Time of COVID-19
35. Saying NO
• Stand up
• Look at the person straight in
the eye
• With a loud powerful voice, say
• NO!
36. REMEMBER
It is important to teach
children that if the
offender threatens
them with a knife, a
gun or via any other
means they should
save themselves.
Whom should children tell if
they experience a confusing or
unsafe touch?
37. • Have children understand
that they should tell a trusted
adult until someone believes
and helps him/her
38. Child Sexual Abuse is a Crime!
It is important to build up children’s protective
behavior, but at the end of the day, offenders are
accountable for their own behavior and the sexual
abuse
41. Social media users in the Philippines
There were 73 million social media users in
the Philippines in January 2020
42. The number of social media users in the
Philippines increased by 5.8 million or
(+8.6%)between April 2019 and January 2020
43. Children have increased time spent
online with the absence of face to
face learning
Potentially increasing risks to:
• exposure to inappropriate
/harmful online
content(pornography, violence,
cyberbullying)
• possible interactions with
offendersonline
• (grooming)
46. It is always important to
relate the offline to the
online, even if for many
children, there are no
distinctions
47. The concept of Strangers
Strangers are people we do
not know.
This is the same both offline
and online
The way we interact with
strangers offline should be
the same online.
53. Protecting Private
Information
If it involves the private body
parts, then it is already
PRIVATE information. This
SHOULD NOT BE
SHARED TO EVERYONE
57. We must protect families, we must protect children, who
have inalienable rights and should be loved, should be
taken care of physically and mentally, and should not be
brought into the world only to suffer.